Richmond Hill capped off two weeks of spring football practice this past Friday with their annual spring "Black/Gold" scrimmage. While the Gold team, the current number one offense and number two defense edged the Black team 8-0, both sides made plays that impressed and gave their coaches reason for concern.

For a team whose accomplishments were so much a sum of all its individual parts picking out a few to bestow honors on may have been the hardest thing the Wildcats had to do this 2007 season. Last Monday night, they gave thanks to their supporters and did just that anyway.

Playing one of the top teams in the state, on their own turf, in the first round of the state playoffs turned out to be every bit the challenge head Coach Mitchell Curry and his team thought it would be. The Wildcats would need to play their best baseball of the season in not one, but two of three games if they were to somehow advance past region 2-AAA number one seed Columbus High School.

The Bryan County Redskins baseball team traveled to Turner County Friday for Region 3A State Competition. The Redskins had to play hometown team Turner County in a best of three series that would determine which would advance into the next series of play. The first game was held Friday afternoon. The Redskins had a total of eleven hits but that would not be enough as Turner took the 9-6 win. Leading hitters for Bryan County included Trey Boatright going 3-5 with 2 RBIs, Justin Covington going 3-5, Aaron Dudley going 2 for 3 with 2 walks, Wesley Wilkes going 2 ...

To stay in shape for their big trip to the state tourney in Turner County, the Redskin baseball team had a scrimmage with Johnson on Monday. This season marks the first time in ten years that BCHS has earned the right to play at state.

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In June 2013 Nik Wallenda, of the famous Flying Wallenda circus family, walked 1,500 feet above the Little Colorado River Gorge on nothing more than a 2-inch steel cable. It took a little more than 22 minutes to walk the quarter-mile battling 30 mph winds and dust along the way. Talk about a balancing act.

BOZEMAN — Al Nash is a spokesman for Yellowstone National Park. As part of his job, he often addresses issues relating to grizzly bears and bison. But he recently added a new topic to the list: Bigfoot.